A few years ago, before the launch of Panasonic Eluga I2, I2 Activ or I3 Mega and other Android smartphones, we were all talking about how BlackBerry and iPhone devices are so secured to a point that their real owners can track who is using it when stolen or lost. In some cases, the phone might just be unusable to whoever found it until the rightful owner unlocks the device which most times have to do with him/her signing into the earlier setup (email and or password) account of that device.

Android – the leading choice of most smartphones operating system out there has finally joined the league to make users device (like Panasonic Eluga I2, I2 Activ or I3 Mega) super secured from theft or just unusable when it gets lost. But the truth is most times lost or stolen isn't the case. Rather, it is passed on to a friend, family or sold out as fairly used without the initial user unlocking and removing their setup Google Account (even after a factory or hard reset).

I will show you a few steps to follow on how to bypass Google Account (FRP) on your Panasonic Eluga I2, I2 Activ or I3 Mega but first, let me explain what FRP means and how it works.

There are basically two methods to bypass a Google Factory Reset Protection (FRP) on Panasonic Eluga I2, I2 Activ or I3 Mega. Like I mentioned earlier: most times Android phones like Panasonic Eluga I2, I2 Activ or I3 Mega are passed on to a friend or family which means if you tell them about method one (1) you won't have to apply the final option – method two (2) that bypasses FRP lock.